HOUSTON — After missing their first postseason since 2016, the Astros have made significant changes to their coaching, front office and athletic training staffs.
Astros managers Alex Cintrón and Troy Snitker will not have their contracts renewed by the club, sources told MLB.com on Thursday, along with Major League coach Michael Collins, who has been handling catchers. Additionally, a source said the club would not retain assistant general manager Andrew Ball, who just completed his fourth season.
Additionally, head athletic trainer Jeremiah Randall will not return in 2026, a source said. The team has not confirmed the moves.
The changes come after the Astros, who were devastated by injuries all season, stumbled in the second half of the season and missed the playoffs by one game. Houston went 87-75 and tied with Detroit for the American League’s third Wild Card, but the Tigers held on for the tiebreaker. The Astros had made the playoffs eight straight seasons.
The rest of the Astros coaching staff is expected to return, although only third base coach Tony Perezchica and QA coach Jason Bell are currently under contract for next season (Perezchica has two years remaining on his deal). Astros manager Joe Espada will be in the final year of his three-year contract in 2026.
Espada was informed during the final week of the regular season that he was returning for 26. General manager Dana Brown will enter the fourth and final year of his contract next year.
Cintrón, who played nine seasons in the major leagues, joined the Astros in 2017 as the club’s Spanish translator, advance coach and assistant coach. He was promoted to first base coach in 2018 and hitting coach in 1919, before the Astros set the Major League record for slugging percentage that season. Snitker, the son of former Braves manager Brian Snitker, joined the team in 2019. Both were in those roles when the Astros won the World Series in ’22.
Collins, a native of Australia, joined the Astros in 2018 and worked closely with the catchers.
A season after leading the AL in batting average in 24, the Astros’ offense has regressed this year, although injuries have played a huge role. They ranked 21st in MLB in runs, tied for 16th in home runs, 26th in walks, tied for 11th in average, tied for 14th in OPS, and 23rd in batting average with runners in scoring position. Houston was 28th in pitches seen per plate appearance.
The Astros have had 28 players on the IL this year, including eight players with multiple stints. FanGraphs projected the Astros’ potential WAR loss to injuries at 17.6, which was the highest in the major leagues.
At one point, the Astros had 18 players on the injured list. Along the way, they lost Yordan Alvarez for 100 games with a broken hand and for the final 11 games with a sprained ankle.
Additionally, four pitchers underwent Tommy John surgery: Ronel Blanco, Hayden Wesneski, Brandon Walter and Luis Garcia, who underwent a second such operation on October 1.
One of Ball’s responsibilities was to oversee sports medicine and performance. Randall, whose group was named Major League Baseball’s Athletic Training Staff of the Year in 2017 by the Professional Baseball Athletic Trainers Society, just completed his 10th season leading the Astros’ training staff.
Tim BontempsOctober 9, 2025, 11:46 a.m. ETCloseTim Bontemps is a senior NBA writer for ESPN.com who covers the league and…
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